Skip to main content

14. How I fell in love - Part 2

Support Provided By
valley_near_los_angeles_hermann_herzog

In books. Because of books. Naturally.

Sixty Years in Southern Californiaby Harris Newmark. Newmark’s memoir, published in 1916, is a revelation. Even more remarkable, it is an account of Jewish Los Angeles in the mid-19th century. Newmark’s city in 1853 - a dozen years after the American occupation - is violent and beautiful. The contradictions that still color what Los Angeles means are everywhere in the cowtown the city was. Horace Bell’s Reminiscences of a Ranger (1881) covers much of the same period much more luridly.

Southern California Country: An Island on the Land by Carey McWilliams. McWilliams’ interpretive history of Los Angeles, first published in 1946, still shapes how we think of the city. His themes are greed and ignorance in the sunshine (his parallel is novelist Raymond Chandler). Robert Towne’s screenplay for Chinatown is McWilliams rewritten.

Muscatel at Noon by Matt Weinstock. Weinstock's collections of newspaper columns from the Los Angeles Daily News, published in 1951, are mordant postcards from a city that had room (mostly on Bunker Hill) every form of washed-up humanity. Later, Jack Smith covered the same territory for the Los Angeles Times, but from a much gentler, suburbanized perspective.

Los Angeles A to Z: An Encyclopedia of the City and County by Leonard and Dale Pitt. The Pitts’ 1997 book is the essential reference. If you don’t have a copy, you really aren’t’ interested in the city, only in its illusions.

Eden by Design: The 1930 Olmsted-Bartholomew Plan for the Los Angeles Region, introduced by Greg Hise and William Deverell. Hise and Deverell’s republication in 2000 of the nearly lost Olmsted-Bartholomew plan (most of the few original copies were destroyed) offers an alternative-history Los Angeles, where parks and beaches and riverside walks bind together the county’s scattered landscapes. It’s too good to be true, however, and the plan was buried in the crash of 1929 and, as Deverell and Hise make clear, in the city’s fears.

The image on this page is A Valley Near Los Angeles, a landscape by Hermann Herzog (ca. 1880s).

Support Provided By
Read More
Gray industrial towers and stacks rise up from behind the pitched roofs of warehouse buildings against a gray-blue sky, with a row of yellow-gold barrels with black lids lined up in the foreground to the right of a portable toilet.

California Isn't on Track To Meet Its Climate Change Mandates. It's Not Even Close.

According to the annual California Green Innovation Index released by Next 10 last week, California is off track from meeting its climate goals for the year 2030, as well as reaching carbon neutrality by 2045.
A row of cows stands in individual cages along a line of light-colored enclosures, placed along a dirt path under a blue sky dotted with white puffy clouds.

A Battle Is Underway Over California’s Lucrative Dairy Biogas Market

California is considering changes to a program that has incentivized dairy biogas, to transform methane emissions into a source of natural gas. Neighbors are pushing for an end to the subsidies because of its impact on air quality and possible water pollution.
A Black woman with long, black brains wears a black Chicago Bulls windbreaker jacket with red and white stripes as she stands at the top of a short staircase in a housing complex and rests her left hand on the metal railing. She smiles slightly while looking directly at the camera.

Los Angeles County Is Testing AI's Ability To Prevent Homelessness

In order to prevent people from becoming homeless before it happens, Los Angeles County officials are using artificial intelligence (AI) technology to predict who in the county is most likely to lose their housing. They would then step in to help those people with their rent, utility bills, car payments and more so they don't become unhoused.